Jump to navigation

Kenya

Deputy President Ruto tries to sideline impeachment threat and lashes out at Odinga

The county governments are to debate the Building Bridges Initiative which will boost their budgets

The National Assembly will resume sitting on Tuesday (9 February) but personal power struggles rather than new policies are set to dominate this session despite concerns about the economic effect of the coronavirus pandemic in the region.

On Tuesday, the Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) report will be tabled at the Nairobi County Assembly, as it makes its way through the devolved county legislatures before reaching national lawmakers (AC Vol 62 No 2, The race for Nairobi).

The campaign by Deputy President William Ruto's opponents to impeach him will shift up a gear this week. 

President Uhuru Kenyatta's 'handshake' partner Raila Odinga has been told by his Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) that they will agree to support Ruto's impeachment only if it is certain to get the two-thirds support needed in the National Assembly. The ODM wants to avoid any political responsibility should it fail.

Although Musalia Mudavadi's Amani National Congress strongly backs the move against Ruto, the campaign is being driven mainly by Jubilee Party officials David Murathe and Raphael Tuju.

Ruto's allies in the National Assembly are to talk tactics when they hold a parliamentary group meeting at the Deputy President's mansion on Monday (8 February) ahead of the reopening of the parliamentary session.

Insisting that he does not oppose the BBI process but only the machinations behind it, Ruto is trying to target Odinga, now seen as his main rival for the presidency in 2022 (AC Vol 61 No 23, A divisive plan for unity). 

Ruto's new tactic is to avoid demanding a referendum on the BBI but to pick holes in its recommendations on increased finance for county administrations and for an expanded number of MPs and other political posts in government.

He is stepping up the rhetoric against Odinga, whom he accused over the weekend of not knowing whether he was in government or opposition.



Related Articles

The race for Nairobi

The BBI alliance is manoeuvring its ally into the Nairobi governorship because it fears losing another by-election

The political differences between Deputy President William Ruto and President Uhuru Kenyatta are playing themselves out in the tussle to fill the position of the governor of Nairobi.


A divisive plan for unity

A new report is supposed to be the blueprint for sweeping reforms but it has deepened the split between the president and his deputy

Three years after President Uhuru Kenyatta won re-election in polls boycotted by opposition leader Raila Odinga, the two erstwhile rivals sat on a red-carpeted podium at the Bomas...


Judges misjudged

A close-run election and corruption allegations will give judicial appointments extra significance

As Kenya's presidential race speeds up, the contenders have their eyes on the legal system. For incumbent President Mwai Kibaki, this may be an additional insurance policy in...


Al Qaida bomb compensation

A new front has opened in the long-running battle for compensation for the non-American victims of the 1998 bombings of the United States embassies in Kenya and Tanzania....


Ethnic alarums

More than most countries, Kenya's politics is about winning over ethnic constituencies and building powerful coalitions. Recently, Kenyans have heard warnings about the dangers of ethnic violence ahead...